Low are a moody minimalist band with pretty
songs that could make you cry. I guess they were secretly always
destined to become a QRD band, after all, they did an interview for Whirlpool
four years ago & they toured with the Swans... the interview was coducted
by mail & cassette.

QRD – what is the coolest category/label
you've had put on you, what's the cheesiest & what do you feel is the
most appropriate?

Mimi – I guess Mike Watts saying we were
punk, that's the coolest.

Alan – what's the cheesiest? slow-core.
I hate that word. the most appropriate is anything that uses the
word minimal in it, but I don't think anybody's made one up for that.

QRD – what's going on with you as far
as record labels, are you still dealing with Vernon Yard?

Alan – no, we have not been doing stuff
on Vernon Yard for two or three years now. our last EP came out on
Kranky & we're going to record in november an LP for Kranky that should
come out in march.

QRD – is there a reason why you choose
not to print your lyrics?

Alan – there wasn't at first & since
then people keep asking us about printing lyrics & I guess sometimes
we consider it & sometimes we don't.

Mimi – we haven't really thought about
it too much. it's not like we're doing it to offend anybody or throw
anybody off.

Alan – especially people from europe want
to read our lyrics because they want to understand what we're saying, but
sometimes I just picture them there reading, "hey, hey, momma, say the
way you move, gonna make you sweat, gonna make you groove." I don't
know, sometimes there's just something lost in lyrics being written down.
we may put the lyrics on the next record, but only because everybody from
france keeps asking.

QRD – is "Over the Ocean" meant to be
physically or emotionally over the ocean?

Alan – yes.

QRD – what's your favorite Swans song?
what one would you cover for a tribute?

Alan – I like a bunch of their stuff.
they have a new song "I Am the Sun" & that's a good one. but
the old stuff I guess was the first things I heard. I think "Failure"
is absolutely a classic, one of the greatest lyrical songs ever written.
I don't know, a lot of old stuff like "Blackout" & "Red Sheet" &
all that stuff. the really brutal stuff I think is really great too
& I think any of those would be pretty great. "Mother, My Body
Disgusts Me" is a good one too.

QRD – why did you record Songs for a Dead
Pilot at home? do you feel it compromised it in anyway?

Alan – it's a combination of two things.
we didn't have very much of a recording budget & it would've been really
hard to go into a studio because we would've only been able to be there
for like a day or two with the money that was available. plus we
were starting to be interested in learning how to record & we had done
some stuff on a four track & stuff. but once you've done a few records,
everybody's always curious about how to do it themselves. so that's
why we decided to do it at home. do I feel it compromised it in anyway?
I don't know, do you? I think it sounds like an eight track recording
for sure, but I think the experience kind of enhanced it a little bit.
we were able to kind of work at our own pace with it. if we started
& a couple hours in realized that things weren't working that day we
could just call it a day & come back. & we always had the
freedom of doing a song & if we felt like it didn't work out we didn't
feel like we'd wasted tons of money & time doing it. so we did
a bunch of stuff & ended up just using what we thought worked the best.
plus being eight tracks it kind of forces you to be economical as far as
how you record things & thinking about things as far as how can we
get this song together with only so many pieces. what did you think
about Songs for a Dead Pilot? how'd you like it?

Mimi – I liked it just fine.

Alan – yeah, but describe the experience
of recording it.

Mimi – you already did. it was nice
because it was in the basement & we could come up & get a glass
of water or juice whenever we wanted.

Alan – yeah, that was cool.

Mimi – we could take breaks whenever we
wanted.

QRD – how old were you when you first
found out about zombies? what did you think of them then & what
do you think of them now?

Alan – I remember having a little paperback
book, I think it was called Movie Monsters or something, & there were
pictures in there from Dr. Something on the Island of Zombies or something
like that. I kinda remember looking at that & getting pretty
scared. I figured anybody who was dead & had come back to life
probably wasn't someone to mess with. how old was I? I suppose ten.

Mimi – I don't know, but I think it was
an episode of Super Friends. the Legion of Doom had all these zombies
that were out to get the Super Friends. & I didn't like them
because I liked the Super Friends myself.

Alan – who didn't?

Mimi – I know. & what do I think
about them now? I still don't like them.

Alan – zombies are stupid.

Mimi – if they would unite for a common
good maybe, but they're just about killing & they can't talk &
always hold there arms out straight ahead of them & what's the point
of that?

Alan – yeah, I mean if you can't talk,
you can't organize. so all they're going to do is run around like
Night of the Living Dead & Return of the Living Dead, that was a great
movie with TSOL & Cramps & stuff like that on the soundtrack.

Mimi – that was good, don't we have that
soundtrack?

Alan – we have that soundtrack.

Mimi – we should be playing that in the
background. I guess we should've read the questions first.

QRD – what's the best record to listen
to after someone's just broken up with you?

Alan – boy, I don't know, that's a tuffy.
we haven't broken up in a long time. I'd say the last time I broke
up with someone was probably back in 1982 or 1983 & I think I was probably
listening to what's that Tears for Fears song?

Mimi – "Shout?"

Alan – "shout, shout, let it all out,
these are the things I can do without, come on." which comes back
to the whole thing about not writing lyrics. what about you?
what's a good break up song?

Mimi – well, of course there's "Breaking
Up Is Hard to Do" where Neil Sedakka tells you all about it. you
can't re-live what you just did.

Alan – it's hard to do.

QRD – why did you do the remix record
& are you pleased with the results?

Alan – well, we didn't do the remix record
actually. that was entirely Vernon Yard's idea.

Mimi – who we haven't been affiliated
with in over two years.

Alan – well they had an idea to do a remix
record & we'd been dropped by them so we were kind of like, "yeah,
whatever." cause we'd just been dropped & it's kind of like breaking
up with someone & then that person coming to you & saying, "I know
we're broken up & all, but remember those pictures of you I took in
the park that one day? well, I'm gonna use it for an art exhibit."
& you're kind of like, "whatever, just, you know, whatever."
so you're kind of a part of it, but kind of not part of it. it's
interesting. I think there's some interesting stuff on there &
I think there're some great artists on there or whatever, but it's just
so distanced from us & we didn't really have as much say in it as people
perceive that we do. it's kind of weird because it says "Low" on
it & it's probably the least involved thing we've ever been involved
with it. pleased isn't necessarily the answer. it's okay, but
I have nothing against anybody who's on there. I think it would've
been different if it was totally up to us.

QRD – are you ever tempted to rock out?

Alan – sure. sometimes we kind of
let that out whether it's volume or whatever. we acknowledge a big
part of this band is being in control & being very quiet & trying
to delve into things that do not rock out.

Mimi – I don't know, do people who rock
out ever feel like they need to slow down & be quiet?

Alan – The Ramones did "Be True to Your
School" or something, some ballad.

Mimi – if you think back to the eighties
with all those metal bands. whenever they did a rock ballad it was
inevitably the prom song of that year & the big radio hit. &
that's what we're looking for.

Alan – yeah, why not have a band that's
all prom songs?

Mimi – the odds if you're doing all slow
songs like that, the odds just have got to be huge that you'll have a radio
hit & a prom song.

Alan – yeah, you never heard the rocking
out Cinderella, you always heard, "nobody's fool, nobody's fool, no fool."
& that's a great song, but you know. like Bon Jovi "Wanted Dead
or Alive" is a slow song. so we're a little flabbergasted at the
fact that we're not all over Mtv & played at every prom.

Mimi – that we're not on light rock stations
throughout america.

Alan – so maybe we should rock out &
then people would take us seriously.

Mimi – then they would take notice of
our slow songs.

QRD – do you have a problem that in clubs
your music comes across as quiet & not as overwhelming as it could
be?

Alan – oh yeah. we knew from the
beginning that if we played clubs it would possibly be very frustrating
to some people because they're more used to something that rocks.
usually if we can help it we'll try to make sure that we're mixed fairly
loud so that even though we're quiet & slow, at least you can hear
us. if we're mixed so quiet that you can't hear us, it's a lot easier
for people to ignore us. it depends, because if people are not into
this kind of stuff, there is no way we're gonna convince them to listen.
if you came to listen then you'll listen & anything we do as far as
trying to attract attention isn't going to necessarily change things in
the long run.

QRD – do you have trouble living the life
you want to live while spending so much time on the road?

Alan – being in a band kind of opens up
some things. like when we're at home we don't have to work quite
as much. because when we're on the road we're obviously working real
hard & when we're at home it kind of lets up & we have the freedom
to do some things that we enjoy doing, but someone who had a nine to five
five days a week kind of job would not be able to do. are you having
trouble living the life you want to live?

Mimi – I don't know. touring is
a time when it's hard to do anything else. you think "at home I have
this I could do or that." but obviously you're confined to the van
& clubs & what not. yeah, you can get out & walk a little
bit & you can read a lot. I read four books this last tour.
it almost feels like your life is on hold for that amount of time.
especially for us because when we're at home we've got family here &
I've got a sister & she's got a little baby & you think "gee, I'm
missing the things he's doing." touring is fine & I guess it
does accomplish something because it brings your music to people that would
otherwise not hear it. but I guess basically life is at home for
me.

Alan – yeah, it doesn't seem like on tour
time goes forward & that you're living life as much as "oh, I have
to stop life for a little bit & go do this touring stuff." I
mean, we like touring & it is a big part of what we do, but it is really
a surreal existence because you're not really at home & you're not
really gone doing this specific thing from day to day. there's no
timeline of I'll go & do this thing & then I come home. it's
more like you're gone & for a while you live this whole other life
& then you return & pick up where you left off on the day you left.
which is kind of weird.

QRD – is there anything you feel people
should be particularly aware of?

Alan – they should be aware of danger.
they should be aware of their own weaknesses & their things that they
need to be working on. they need to be aware of the fact that everything
they do effects others.

Mimi – I can't think of anything.

Alan – you can't think of anything that
anybody should be aware of?

Mimi – we're not terribly political &
we have no platform & no agendas.

Alan – I think he might have meant about
the band. things people should be aware of about the band.
no, nothing that's not already obvious.

Mimi – don't believe everything you read.

Alan – especially on that silly computer.

Mimi – half-truths.

Alan – I hear that people are not totally
truthful.

QRD – what bands & music if any do
you think people should listen to or respect more?

Alan – that's a good question, better
than saying, "what's your favorite bands?" I think it's pretty commonly
known that the Beatles were a great influence on pop music & they really
did shape the way music was approached. I don't want to sound too
music geeky or whatever, but there's stuff like the Beach Boys that are
really great, especially Pet Sounds which is a colossal record that you
can listen to a million times & still hear new things in it that you
wouldn't have thought otherwise.

Mimi – people can listen to whatever they
want.

Alan – there's validity in just about
everything out there I guess.

Mimi – don't eat it up because you hear
it on the radio or that type of thing, think about it.

Alan – yeah, there're very few things
on the radio that have any validity to them. at least on popular
alternative radio.

Mimi – they have validity, but they're
not the end all get all. chances are they're probably not that original.
just seek things out.

Alan – look. when Mimi & I were
young growing up on the farm we really had to try hard to find interesting
music. you really had to go out of your way to find a tape by the
Sex Pistols or Siouxsie & the Banshees or Hüsker Du or the Replacements.
REM even was a rarity. music is more rewarding when it's something
you have to work to get & work to understand & usually those are
the kinds of bands that are more satisfying. there's a lot of really
great new stuff coming out lately, but to begin with one would do injustice
to
all the others. there's still really great music being made, but
like I said, it's harder to find. don't trust anything that's on
the radio. there is some that's great, but it's the same as it's
always been.